diff options
-rw-r--r-- | man/man3/zmq_bind.3 | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | man/man3/zmq_connect.3 | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | man/man7/zmq_pgm.7 | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | man/man7/zmq_tcp.7 | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | man/man7/zmq_udp.7 | 5 |
5 files changed, 31 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/man/man3/zmq_bind.3 b/man/man3/zmq_bind.3 index c4d955e..b8f2102 100644 --- a/man/man3/zmq_bind.3 +++ b/man/man3/zmq_bind.3 @@ -5,16 +5,20 @@ zmq_bind \- binds the socket to the specified address .B int zmq_bind (void *s, const char *addr); .SH DESCRIPTION The function binds socket -.IR s to a particular transport. Actual semantics of the +.IR s +to a particular transport. Actual semantics of the command depend on the underlying transport mechanism, however, in cases where peers connect in an asymetric manner, .IR zmq_bind should be called first, .IR zmq_connect -afterwards. For actual formats of +afterwards. Actual formats of .IR addr -parameter for different types of transport have a look at -.IR zmq(7) . +parameter are defined by individual transports. For a list of supported +transports have a look at +.IR zmq(7) +manual page. + Note that single socket can be bound (and connected) to arbitrary number of peers using different transport mechanisms. .SH RETURN VALUE diff --git a/man/man3/zmq_connect.3 b/man/man3/zmq_connect.3 index 291d113..dd0b5d8 100644 --- a/man/man3/zmq_connect.3 +++ b/man/man3/zmq_connect.3 @@ -5,17 +5,21 @@ zmq_connect \- connect the socket to the specified peer .B int zmq_connect (void *s, const char *addr); .SH DESCRIPTION The function connect socket -.IR s to the peer identified by +.IR s +to the peer identified by .IR addr . Actual semantics of the command depend on the underlying transport mechanism, however, in cases where peers connect in an asymetric manner, .IR zmq_bind should be called first, .IR zmq_connect -afterwards. For actual formats of +afterwards. Formats of the .IR addr -parameter for different types of transport have a look at -.IR zmq(7) . +parameter are defined by individual transports. For a list of supported +transports have a look at +.IR zmq(7) +manual page. + Note that single socket can be connected (and bound) to arbitrary number of peers using different transport mechanisms. .SH RETURN VALUE diff --git a/man/man7/zmq_pgm.7 b/man/man7/zmq_pgm.7 index e432730..68af978 100644 --- a/man/man7/zmq_pgm.7 +++ b/man/man7/zmq_pgm.7 @@ -32,6 +32,11 @@ mutlicast group should be specified in the numeric representation. For example: pgm://192.168.0.111:224.0.0.1:5555 .fi +Note that NIC names are not standardised by POSIX. They tend to be rather +arbitrary and platform dependent. Say, "eth0" on Linux would correspond to "en0" +on OSX and "e1000g" on Solaris. On Windows platform, as there are no short NIC +names available, you have to use numeric IP addresses instead. + .SH WIRE FORMAT Consecutive PGM packets are interpreted as a single continuous stream of data. diff --git a/man/man7/zmq_tcp.7 b/man/man7/zmq_tcp.7 index aa3f56e..f5504c8 100644 --- a/man/man7/zmq_tcp.7 +++ b/man/man7/zmq_tcp.7 @@ -18,6 +18,11 @@ a NIC name or a hostname (resolved by DNS): tcp://lo:32768 .fi +Note that NIC names are not standardised by POSIX. They tend to be rather +arbitrary and platform dependent. Say, "eth0" on Linux would correspond to "en0" +on OSX and "e1000g" on Solaris. On Windows platform, as there are no short NIC +names available, you have to use numeric IP addresses instead. + .SH WIRE FORMAT A message consists of a message length followed by message data. diff --git a/man/man7/zmq_udp.7 b/man/man7/zmq_udp.7 index bfebc1c..151a6d4 100644 --- a/man/man7/zmq_udp.7 +++ b/man/man7/zmq_udp.7 @@ -24,6 +24,11 @@ mutlicast group should be specified in the numeric representation. For example: udp://192.168.0.111:224.0.0.1:5555 .fi +Note that NIC names are not standardised by POSIX. They tend to be rather +arbitrary and platform dependent. Say, "eth0" on Linux would correspond to "en0" +on OSX and "e1000g" on Solaris. On Windows platform, as there are no short NIC +names available, you have to use numeric IP addresses instead. + .SH WIRE FORMAT Same as with PGM transport except for UDP packet headers. |